As much as I dislike gun control laws, these two provide a good reason why some people should not be allowed near firearms of any kind.
Playing William Tell with a watermelon and a .50 cal. Barrett.:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:
As much as I dislike gun control laws, these two provide a good reason why some people should not be allowed near firearms of any kind.
Playing William Tell with a watermelon and a .50 cal. Barrett.:rolleyes::rolleyes::rolleyes:
Are we sure that the melon wasn’t 'sploded by means other than the .50 caliber round?
I’m hoping that’s the case but the time delay from firing to hit is right and there’s a cloud of debris and dust when the rifle is fired and the shooter is jolted by the recoil.
Even if faked, you know some other pair of idiots will try it for real.
I’ve also seen watermelons and other thing hit by bullets and the splatter looks right.
I don’t know that detonating an explosive charge on top of his head really makes him seem less stupid, though.
“Trained Professionals”.
Who on EARTH trains people to do this?
The military?
The International Association of Watermelon Warriors, of course.
I’m surprised you didn’t know this.
Nah. Needs alcohol to really make them stupid.
And someone saying Hey Hold my beer and watch this!
There are better ways to crack open a watermelon. (mildly NSFW)
R. Lee Ermey never tried that!
(Now how do I get that disturbing image out of my head?)
We can only hope she uses her ability for good, not evil.:eek:
Evolution is a slow and imprecise process, but it does make incremental gains over time. Technology just accelerates the process.
Stranger
He does a lot of special effects stuff in his videos. I don’t think I’d bet the rent on this being real.
I’m not convinced that’s a woman.
Especially if you inform them that they can qualify for a Darwin Award if they try!
They don’t compare with the five graffiti artists who stood on train tracks, just outside a tunnel that muffled the sound of the train to do their thing, whatever it was. Three of them are now up for Darwin awards. Posthumously, of course.